56 So. 916 | Ala. | 1911
This is a bill by a single judgment creditor to set aside a number of conveyances of its debt
The property, the subject-matter of the suit, originally belonged to one W. A. Skinner, who died intestate on the 13th day of February, 1907, leaving the respondents as heirs and distributees of his estate, Avith the exception of B. P. Allen, Jr., who is the husband of one of deceased’s daughters. These heirs and distributees at the time of or soon after the death of A. B. Skinner composed a partnership under the name of W. A. Skinner Company, and as partners became indebted to complainant, which debt Avas reduced to judgment in May, 1909, and Avas thereafter recorded in Marengo county. The partnership Avas also largely indebted to other creditors, including W. M. Spencer, in the sum of $11,000,- and to Mrs. Watkins in the sum of $1,484. These two debts Avere secured by mortgages upon the lands in question. The partnership continued to do business up to March 5, 1908, upon the lands in question, and so continued to use the property of the estate of W. A. Skinner in connection Avith the business; but there is no sufficient averment that this property was a part of the assets of the partnership, it rather appearing from all the averments of the bill that it Avas the individual property of the partners, instead of being that of the partnership proper. But the bill is a little uncertain as to this. On February 27, 1908, prior to the rendition of complainant’s judgment and to the acquiring of any lien, but during the continuancy of the partnership, all the heirs except
No statute probably has been often er construed by tbe courts than the statute under consideration. England and most all tbe states of tbe Union have statutes similar to this. St. 13 Elix. c. 5, is said to be tbe last of a series of English statutes which has ever since been tbe foundation of modern laws on tbe subject of fraudulent conveyances. Tbe various state statutes upon tbe subject will be found to be largely modeled after it, and, in tbe main, re-enactments of it. This statute, however, both in England and America, has been held by tbe courts to be largely declaratory of the common law. Judge Dillon in tbe case of Gardner v. Cole, 21 Iowa, 205-210, said that tbe English statute bad never been reenacted in Iowa, but that the English statute was mainly, if not wholly, declaratory of tbe common law, which at an early date “set a face of flint against fraud in every shape,” and so became tbe basis of American jurisprudence on this subject and that it was, therefore, in that' state a part of tbe unwritten law.
The intent put into action, and which merely binders or delays tbe creditor, is sufficient. It need not defraud him, nor deprive him wholly, or even partially, of bis remedy for finally obtaining satisfaction of bis debt or demand. Tbe intent to defraud, however, must exist to render the transaction void; but this intent is sometimes a question of fact and sometimes a question of law. If the necessary consequence of a given act, on tbe part of a debtor, is to binder, delay, or defraud bis creditor, then tbe law conclusively presumes that it was committed with tbe intent to defraud, no matter what was the motive that prompted tbe act. Such would be a voluntary gift by an insolvent debtor of a large- part
For a bill to be sufficient under this statute, it is not necessary that it should set forth facts showing any formal or premeditated design to accomplish the illegal purpose. It is enough that it alleges facts which reasonably show an intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors. If facts are thus alleged which reasonably show the necessary intent, the transaction cannot be sustained by showing that there is open to the creditors some remedy other than the setting aside of the fraudulent transactions. It has been uniformly held, however, that ci*editors’ bills for the purpose of setting-aside conveyances made by debtors as fraudulent must plainly and succinctly state the facts which constitute the fraud; that mere allegations, in terms, that the conveyance was “fraudulent” or was made with the “intent to hinder, delay or defraud,” are not sufficient; that allegations which merely impute motives of fraud are not sufficient; that fraud must be charged, which should be-done by setting forth the facts which constitute it. In the case of Ft. Payne Furnace Co. v. Ft. Payne Coal Co., 96 Ala. 476, 11 South, 440, 38 Am. St. Rep. 109, the rule was thus stated by Stone, G. J.: “A mere general averment of fraud as that a conveyance, or a sale or other disposition made or threatened was or is with fraudu
These two cases we think clearly show that the facts averred in this bill do not show any fraudulent intent sufficient to support the general averments or conclusions of the pleader as to fraud. The facts-averred in
As a part of this partition Mrs. Allen agreed to discharge a mortgage lien of Mrs. Watkins to the amount of more than $1,400, the other owners agreeing to discharge that of Mr. Spencer to the amount of more than $11,000; they thus attempting to free the property for the use of the respective joint owners and their respective creditors. Surely there could be no fraud in this as agáinst the other unsecured creditors who had no lien upon the property. It Avas clearly to their advantage that these prior and paramount liens should be discharged. We are wholly unable to see hoAV the rights of any of the creditors other than Mrs. Watkins and Mr. Spencer Avere violated or could.be injured by this voluntary mode of partition of the property and of the incumbrances thereon. And the two creditors named are not complaining. Mrs. Allen not being a debtor of complainant, it is certain that the latter had no right to proceed against her interest in the common property, and her right to have it set apart to her was both prior and paramount to the complainant’s right to proceed against the interests of the other joint owners Avho were
No attendant badges of fraud are shown' by the bill or its exhibits; but, on the other hand, according to the averred facts, as contradistinguished from the conclusions of the pleader, the transactions were perfectly valid and were made in the utmost good faith. None of the transactions were voluntarily, in the sense of not being supported by sufficient consideration. If the facts stated in the bill are true, the real equitable ownership of the property has never changed hands; and there is manifested no intent to conceal the real facts — all have been put upon record as the law directs. The whole of the property came to these respondents by descent. They therefore acquired it as tenants in common, and, of course, the rights of' their creditors must of necessity attach to the property, subject to the rights of the joint OAvners to partition it by sale or by division in specie. The tAvo deeds, made between these joint OAvners, the one to Mrs. Allen, by the other heirs, and the one, by her and her husband, to the other heirs, represented nothing hut a partial partition — -partition to the extent of separating Mrs. Allen’s share from that of the others. No facts are averred to sIioav that there Avas any fraudulent intent in the making of these conveyances. Nothing Avas done that a court of chancery Avould not have done for the parties had they been unable to agree upon a partition. The right of the complainant as against this property, for the satisfaction of its debt, of necessity was subsequent and secondary to the right of the joint owners to partition it, no matter if the joint owners had been its debtors. Having acquired the property by descent, as such joint owners, the right to partition was necessarily prior to the rights of complainant, who was then only a
We will uoav proceed to notice the feature of the bill which deals with the formation of the corporation, and the conveyance of the property thereto in payment of the subscriptions of the stockholders to such corporation. There can be no doubt that a conveyance of property to or for the purpose of the formation of a corporation by a debtor, Avhen. made Avith the purpose or intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, is void, as much as if it Avas attempted to vest the title in an individual or any other entity in fraud of the rights of creditors. As was said by this court in .the case of Metcalf v. Arnold, 110 Ala. 184, 20 South. 301, 55 Am. St. Rep. 24, the formation of a corporation, investing it with the legal title to all the debtors’ property, and parceling out the stock among the debtors and their Avives, may be a neAv devise to defraud creditors. In the case of Kingman v. Mowry, 182 Ill. 256, 55 N. E. 330, 74 Am. St. Rep. 169, the question is discussed more fully than in any case Ave have found. Therein are reviewed the cases declaring conveyances of property for such purpose void, and that court states the law upon the subject as follows: “The contention of appellant is that the transfer by a debtor of his property to a corporation necessarily hinders and delays the creditor in the collection of his debts, and is in all instances a fraud in legal contemplation. Adjudged cases are cited as in support of this position. We have examined these cases, and, while such transactions were condemned in the instances then under consideration, we do not understand it to be deduced from them that it is a
So far as any facts appear from the allegations of this bill, these transactions were rather to the advantage than to the detriment of this complainant. In the first place, the property is not shown to be partnership property, but the individual property of the partners held jointly with others who were not debtors of the complainant, and whose interest in the common property, of' course, could not be subjected to the payment of complainant’s debt against the partnership. The effect of the transaction Avas to separate this interest not liable from that of the partners Avho Avere liable. The other transaction, conveying it to the corporation, Avhich Avas. merely substituted for the partnership, Avas to convert the land into partnership property, or corporate property, which Avas but a substitute for the partnership property. The conveyances also provide for the. discharge of two mortgages upon this property, for more than $12,000, held by other parties than the complainant, thus relieving complainant’s debtors, of this large debt and making them much more able to discharge complainant’s demand. If Mrs. Watkins and Mr. Spencer consented to this transaction — and the bill does not intimate that they objected — then certainly the conveyances did not tend to hinder, delay, or defraud complainant, but made it easier and more certain that it could collect its debt from the respondent and from their stock which they received in lieu of their interests in the land.
Reversed and remanded.